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Read guide →For sixty-five years, one oversized, bombastic rooster ruled the barnyard with an iron beak and a Southern drawl thicker than molasses in January. But the term “Foghorn Leghorn Pack” refers to more than just the character himself. It describes the collective of animators, voice actors, writers, and devoted fans who kept the spirit of alive from his debut in 1946 until the end of an era in 2011. 1946: The Birth of a Loudmouth Created by animator Robert McKimson and writer Warren Foster at Warner Bros. Cartoons, Foghorn Leghorn first strutted onto the screen in Walky Talky Hawky (1946). Inspired by the bombastic radio character Senator Claghorn (voiced by Kenny Delmar), Foghorn was a physical and vocal force of nature.
By Archive Staff
Even after 2011, Foghorn’s voice echoes in internet memes, in impressions by comedians, and in the warm memories of anyone who heard, “That’s a joke, I say, that’s a joke, son.”
The 1990s saw Foghorn return in new shorts for Tiny Toon Adventures (as the mentor to the dim-witted rooster, Fowlmouth) and Space Jam (1996). The pack was now a transgenerational fanbase—parents who remembered the 1940s shorts and kids who knew him from TV reruns. The early 2000s brought Foghorn to DVD collections, video games ( Looney Tunes: Back in Action ), and commercials. But by 2011, a quiet shift occurred. Warner Bros. began focusing on CGI reboots and modernized versions of their characters. The original theatrical shorts—hand-drawn, 7-minute masterpieces—were no longer in production.
The pack has disbanded. But the rooster, I say, the rooster still rules the roost. End of Article
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For sixty-five years, one oversized, bombastic rooster ruled the barnyard with an iron beak and a Southern drawl thicker than molasses in January. But the term “Foghorn Leghorn Pack” refers to more than just the character himself. It describes the collective of animators, voice actors, writers, and devoted fans who kept the spirit of alive from his debut in 1946 until the end of an era in 2011. 1946: The Birth of a Loudmouth Created by animator Robert McKimson and writer Warren Foster at Warner Bros. Cartoons, Foghorn Leghorn first strutted onto the screen in Walky Talky Hawky (1946). Inspired by the bombastic radio character Senator Claghorn (voiced by Kenny Delmar), Foghorn was a physical and vocal force of nature.
By Archive Staff
Even after 2011, Foghorn’s voice echoes in internet memes, in impressions by comedians, and in the warm memories of anyone who heard, “That’s a joke, I say, that’s a joke, son.” Foghorn Leghorn Pack -1946-2011-
The 1990s saw Foghorn return in new shorts for Tiny Toon Adventures (as the mentor to the dim-witted rooster, Fowlmouth) and Space Jam (1996). The pack was now a transgenerational fanbase—parents who remembered the 1940s shorts and kids who knew him from TV reruns. The early 2000s brought Foghorn to DVD collections, video games ( Looney Tunes: Back in Action ), and commercials. But by 2011, a quiet shift occurred. Warner Bros. began focusing on CGI reboots and modernized versions of their characters. The original theatrical shorts—hand-drawn, 7-minute masterpieces—were no longer in production. For sixty-five years, one oversized, bombastic rooster ruled
The pack has disbanded. But the rooster, I say, the rooster still rules the roost. End of Article 1946: The Birth of a Loudmouth Created by
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